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1p(1mpal)

@impalementd

🇰🇷┃@WolvesDAO┃상위 10%로 사는 법

Katılım Eylül 2015
1.5K Takip Edilen9.6K Takipçiler
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
I asked 30 Top Korean KOLs where they are placing their bets for the 2026 Web3 Gaming Sector. Here are their answers to the only 2 questions that matter: 1️⃣ Which Chain will win the GameFi war? 2️⃣ Which Project are you actually backing? This list reflects the collective insight of the Korean & Web3 gaming scene. Get ready to level up your 2026 strategy. 🧵👇
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ながやま こはる
ながやま こはる@nagayama_koharu·
チェンソーマン見てくれてありがとうございました!手伝ってくれたアシスタントさん達もありがとうございました!映画ももう少しで上映終わるらしいです!両方長く見ていただいて感謝です!
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
@0xMementoMori This post is probably pretty neutral and easy to read, but I’m not sure if it will spread throughout the community.
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
@MyriadMarkets Most projects end up revising their plans and leaving their original cradle. Honestly, you founders probably know this best. All plans have gone to hell, and the right move is to exit quickly and wrap things up somehow. Wishing you all the best.
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Verse 8 | Why Code, Just Verse 8
THE VERSE8 GRAND GAME JAM IS COMING 🏆 Top-tier partners 💰 $100,000+ prize pool 🎮 Multiple jams. Even your mom can join We've seen what this community can build. Now we're making it worth your while. 👇
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
Honestly, no matter how hard their team worked or how respectable they may be as people, everyone knew this price crash was coming. The situation was abnormal. Who could reasonably justify it? If someone got caught up in it, they’ll have to face the criticism in the end. It’s unfortunate, but that’s reality.
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iceyyy
iceyyy@iceyyy_gaming·
This was my one support post about $Power's chart I woke up and was excited to see a token and team we know doing well Then afterwards, I learned about the low liquidity and the bridge issues (I spoke about them on stream) As a gaming creator for the past 4 years, I'm deeply invested in supporting the space and the reputable and respectable teams But after seeing all the controversy around the token and today's crash I'm left feeling like how can I bull post crypto gaming Time and time again, we end up with egg on our face It's incredibly disheartening and I'm disappointed in the industry I've tried so hard to add value to for almost half a decade I don't think crypto gaming is all to blame. Obviously, there are a ton of issues in the broader crypto market But damn, crypto gaming needs to do better
iceyyy@iceyyy_gaming

What if i told you there was a gaming token that is up over 7.5x since December? Crypto gaming

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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
인생에서 0부터 시작하게 됐다는 기분을 느낀 게 언제부터인지 모르겠습니다. 네이버라는 포탈에서 게임 연재물로 인기를 얻었을 때가 2016년, 3년의 방황 끝에 Web3 게이밍 외길 인생으로 주목받은 때가 2024년이었습니다. 다시 방황 시작입니다. 제가 표현하고 싶은 내용들과 생각을 담기엔 역시 한국어만한 것이 없군요. 다시 한 번 잘 부탁드립니다.
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
I’m still a 1000% gamer. • Finishing Hysilens in HSR • Playing Mewgenics • Waiting for Slay the Spire 2 Through all this spending and waiting, I’ve spent $1000+ and earned $0😭, but I’ve never been happier playing games. I loved games because even spending felt fun. If spending stresses you out, maybe you’re not gaming anymore. Well, maybe you’re gambling.
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ALEX_LFG
ALEX_LFG@Alex_LFG_·
Monster.Rug, sorry I mean @monstersdotfun decided to shut down the game completely after months of doing nothing. We have to remember the name of the founder @moodsMoodi : simple cash grab on the @AbstractChain community. Over $500 mint price. Stay Safu.
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
gMega @WCNetizens I bought an NFT for the first time in a while. To be honest, there isn’t any particularly interesting money lego on MegaETH right now, but starting next month, I’ll have to wake up from hibernation as well🤞
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
@JonahBlake Timeline Mismatch Token TGE in 3 months vs. 3 years needed for solid development Most demand the former. So 3 years passed, and they all failed.
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Jonah
Jonah@JonahBlake·
I’m coming out of web3 gaming retirement briefly to write my opinion on this post I was a top 5 “kol” in web3 gaming for whatever that’s worth but I also made web3 games and ran an agency that knows how most of these games worked inside and out. I also worked in web2 gaming finance. What Haseeb is saying I somewhat agree with, but it requires some nuance. I’m going to bullet point my thoughts below. -the investors job is to look 3-5 years into the future. Much of the disdain for web3 gaming and media today is coming from visions made in 2020 that vastly missed the mark. The vision was that web3 gaming and media would replace web2 because ownership and finance mattered to players. -it turns out that players only care about these things as end results of a great live service game and not around capital formation of a game. -the big mistake VCs made was in who they invested into rather than just what they invested into. They have LPs and documentation. And so it’s easy to fork money to a 50 yr old boomer who made videos games 25 years ago rather than the new kid in roblox. VC structure was equally as bad as the games that got produced. Even in a hits driven business. -Capital formation for web2 games is equally as bad as web3. Please see ashes of creation as an example. The problem isn’t the thesis, but the formula itself. This does not negate web3 consumer as a concept, but i do agree that it must have financial mechanisms to exist. -back to the investors job, what do we see 3-5 years from now? It may be much of consumer crypto was just very early and I do believe AI is going to flip everything upside down. -where does capital formation sit in the crypto VC thesis when an AI program is $250 per month and can build anything that used to cost 100m in valuation? How much capital actually needs to be formed in this new era for software and defi infrastructure at the seed level? Think about ai 3 years from now. -when world models do scale (3-5 years) what is the cost of making games? Certainly there will still be a cost, but most of the value goes from brute force to weighted taste in assets generated. Something blockchain is pretty good at managing. NFT 2.0 when this happens. My point is he is not entirely wrong about consumer crypto today But a lot of the distaste is based on past assumptions that were driven by very ill informed capital managers and I would not let past debt blur what could be an entirely reconstructed market due to ai Which will disrupt capital formation just as much as it will consumer Every concept we have ever known is currently up the air as we find out how fast our machine gods can grow under LLM architecture. Be open minded
Haseeb >|<@hosseeb

With all due respect to Chris, I completely disagree with this take. Chris argues that "web3," particularly crypto-powered gaming and media, failed due to scams and regulation, and that better regulation will unlock these non-financial cases. OK, think about this for a second. Does this pass the smell test? Do you think web3 gaming failed because of Gary Gensler? Do you think web3 media plays failed because the scammers crowded out the honest media innovators? Really? If this is true, why didn't they kill financial crypto, which had WAY more of both? Financial use cases were right in the crosshairs of the regulatory harassment, and they also attracted way more scams. Why shouldn't we instead accept the more obvious answer: non-financial use cases for crypto have failed because no one wants them. Let's just admit it. They were bad products. They failed the market test. It was not Gensler or SBF or Terra that caused these things to fail, it was that no one wanted any of it. Pretending otherwise is cope. Enormous sums of capital and talent explored these ideas, and we should acknowledge what we learned. That lesson is not "if we just had better laws, then finally people would finally be using decentralized Spotify" or whatever. Call a spade a spade. Every single use case in crypto that has worked at scale has been financial in nature. 2008: Bitcoin - non-sovereign store of value 2014: Tether - stablecoins 2015: Ethereum - programmable money 2017: ICOs - capital formation 2018: Prediction markets (Augur, later Polymarket) 2020: DeFi - literally finance is in the name 2021: NFTs - non-fungible financial assets (to the extent they worked) 2024: RWAs (the year BUIDL took off) All this stuff was adopted bottoms-up. We as investors discovered that people wanted to do these things with crypto. The web3 consumer stuff, on the other hand, was primarily conjured up by investors and pitch decks, ZIRP accelerationism, and "wouldn't it be crazy if" blog posts. This was the opposite of the "what smart people are doing on their weekends" thesis. In fact, if you go back to the Ethereum white paper from 2014, almost every single Ethereum use case Vitalik describes is financial in nature: token issuance, stablecoins, derivatives, on-chain treasuries/DAOs, on-chain savings, insurance, price feeds, escrow, gambling, prediction markets. It's all in there. This is nothing to be ashamed of. Finance is almost 10% of GDP. It's an enormous part of the world economy, and banks are some of the lowest NPS score companies in the world. People hate their banks and the outdated financial architectures their money runs on. It's literally why Bitcoin was created. There is so much to innovate in the realm of finance, and I truly believe we are only at the beginning of that displacement. You don't need to assume anything more to project the next 10x in crypto. The old saying goes "crypto will do to finance what the Internet did to every other industry." I respect Chris's optimism. But 18 years in, we should not be propagating this meme about consumer web3 use cases as though they're inevitable. If you are hanging around the rim hoping that crypto is going to disrupt media and gaming, you should know the history and look at it with clear eyes. Now if you as a founder believe that despite that, you know the secret to cracking this market--I respect that, and I certainly don't begrudge anyone to follow their convictions. But I think it's important that investors be honest that all the evidence points the other way.

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Haseeb >|<
Haseeb >|<@hosseeb·
With all due respect to Chris, I completely disagree with this take. Chris argues that "web3," particularly crypto-powered gaming and media, failed due to scams and regulation, and that better regulation will unlock these non-financial cases. OK, think about this for a second. Does this pass the smell test? Do you think web3 gaming failed because of Gary Gensler? Do you think web3 media plays failed because the scammers crowded out the honest media innovators? Really? If this is true, why didn't they kill financial crypto, which had WAY more of both? Financial use cases were right in the crosshairs of the regulatory harassment, and they also attracted way more scams. Why shouldn't we instead accept the more obvious answer: non-financial use cases for crypto have failed because no one wants them. Let's just admit it. They were bad products. They failed the market test. It was not Gensler or SBF or Terra that caused these things to fail, it was that no one wanted any of it. Pretending otherwise is cope. Enormous sums of capital and talent explored these ideas, and we should acknowledge what we learned. That lesson is not "if we just had better laws, then finally people would finally be using decentralized Spotify" or whatever. Call a spade a spade. Every single use case in crypto that has worked at scale has been financial in nature. 2008: Bitcoin - non-sovereign store of value 2014: Tether - stablecoins 2015: Ethereum - programmable money 2017: ICOs - capital formation 2018: Prediction markets (Augur, later Polymarket) 2020: DeFi - literally finance is in the name 2021: NFTs - non-fungible financial assets (to the extent they worked) 2024: RWAs (the year BUIDL took off) All this stuff was adopted bottoms-up. We as investors discovered that people wanted to do these things with crypto. The web3 consumer stuff, on the other hand, was primarily conjured up by investors and pitch decks, ZIRP accelerationism, and "wouldn't it be crazy if" blog posts. This was the opposite of the "what smart people are doing on their weekends" thesis. In fact, if you go back to the Ethereum white paper from 2014, almost every single Ethereum use case Vitalik describes is financial in nature: token issuance, stablecoins, derivatives, on-chain treasuries/DAOs, on-chain savings, insurance, price feeds, escrow, gambling, prediction markets. It's all in there. This is nothing to be ashamed of. Finance is almost 10% of GDP. It's an enormous part of the world economy, and banks are some of the lowest NPS score companies in the world. People hate their banks and the outdated financial architectures their money runs on. It's literally why Bitcoin was created. There is so much to innovate in the realm of finance, and I truly believe we are only at the beginning of that displacement. You don't need to assume anything more to project the next 10x in crypto. The old saying goes "crypto will do to finance what the Internet did to every other industry." I respect Chris's optimism. But 18 years in, we should not be propagating this meme about consumer web3 use cases as though they're inevitable. If you are hanging around the rim hoping that crypto is going to disrupt media and gaming, you should know the history and look at it with clear eyes. Now if you as a founder believe that despite that, you know the secret to cracking this market--I respect that, and I certainly don't begrudge anyone to follow their convictions. But I think it's important that investors be honest that all the evidence points the other way.
Chris Dixon@cdixon

x.com/i/article/2019…

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WolvesCo
WolvesCo@WolvesDAO·
It's a special day for 4 Wolves who are eligible to mint their SBTs! SBTs are a special part of the Wolves identity, not given by default for being a Wolf, but earned. These 4 have represented the Wolves both online and at IRL events and truly embody Wolves energy. Congrats!
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
I first dove into Web3 gaming in August 2022. Back then, doing crypto meant being treated like a lunatic. My friends were telling me to just get a job at a marketing agency while I still could. In February 2026, I feel a similar atmosphere again. The difference is, this time, adding AI isn’t optional anymore.
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Haseeb >|<
Haseeb >|<@hosseeb·
On the one hand, AI influencers are breathlessly raving about Claude Code, Clawdbot, and Cowork. And on the other hand, most people I know—even software engineers—are despondent, overwhelmed about how everything is changing so quickly. I hear this from people early in their careers especially, a fear that everything they've learned and the skills they've gained are rapidly being devalued. This is a mental trap. Don't fall for it. You should not just be watching from the sidelines or reading articles about "how software engineering is changing." Imagine it was 1993 and the personal computer revolution was kicking off. If you could go back in time to then, what should you have done? The answer: try everything. Buy a PC. Learn how to touch type. Figure out what the Internet is. Imbibe it all. Don't wait until it becomes a job requirement. That's exactly what you should do with AI. Try everything. Try Claude Code, try Clawdbot, try the Excel integrations, Veo, everything you can get your hands on. Learn what it's doing. Build your intuitions. Be one step ahead of it. Evolve alongside it. Don't lose your curiosity or get swallowed by anxiety or let yourself be convinced that you'll learn it when you have to. Think deeply about how AI will change the things around you—not society, that's too hard to project—but how it will change your job, your personal life, your immediate environment. No matter how old you are or young you are, no matter what stage of your career you are in, we are all going through the biggest technological change of the last 100 years, and we're going through it together. Nobody has the answers. It's obvious that so much is going to change, but nobody is going to figure it out before you do if you choose to stay at the frontier. So don't hide from it. Sit at the front of the class. Pay close attention. And be grateful that it's never been easier to stay at the frontier of the most important technology change of our lifetimes.
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Kona
Kona@KonaDeFi·
Big news for all you @pudgypenguins $PENGU holders. Thanks to the support of @AbstractChain team, you can now deposit your PENGU on Kona Lend AND maintain your boost on Abstract. Only 40% of the supply remains til cap is hit. 🌺
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
Goodbye, Gaming Expert. Today, I officially retired that tag from my TG. Web3 gaming was the dream, and I have nothing but respect for the builders still striving for that utopia. After a lot of thought, I’m pivoting for the AI era. My new identity is Curator. Twitter will now focus on Korean trends & podcast, while my TG will be dedicated to refining and digesting those insights. I just had to say this. "It turns out Web3 gaming wasn’t inevitable after all. But it’s definitely not dead."
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1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
@ghost93_x It may be too late, but I will study your footsteps.
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1p(1mpal)
1p(1mpal)@impalementd·
Eliminate low-quality dapps. It took me a year to achieve Diamond1, and I still maintain the position that “Abstract is bullish, but its own Dapp is extremely bearish.” For example, Monsters' founder abandoned the project. Errors within the game went unfixed for days (likely simple fixes), and the NFTs dropped over 90%. The same applies to trash projects like Promotion Royale and Koala Toss. We need to weed out these zombie projects, don't you agree? Being onboarded to the portal should signify that the team has verified the project's credibility. I hope well-planned dapps will enter.
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cygaar
cygaar@0xCygaar·
If you stopped using Abstract over the last few months, what would make you excited about it again? Or if you've been with us this whole, what's something you'd like to see? This can either be portal related, app related, or anything else. Appreciate all feedback here.
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